| Literature DB >> 31312555 |
Ria Mehta1, Kirti Sharma1, Louis Potters2, A Gabriella Wernicke3, Bhupesh Parashar1.
Abstract
Mindfulness is being used increasingly in various aspects of cancer management. Benefits of mindfulness practices are being observed to manage the adverse effects of treatment, symptoms from cancer progression, and the cost-effectiveness compared to conventional contemporary management strategies. In this review article, we present clinical trial data showing the benefits of mindfulness in various aspects of cancer management as well as techniques that have been commonly used in this practice.Entities:
Keywords: cancer; fatigue; mindfulness; pain; stress; techniques
Year: 2019 PMID: 31312555 PMCID: PMC6623989 DOI: 10.7759/cureus.4629
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cureus ISSN: 2168-8184
Summary of seminal studies showing effects of mindfulness-based techniques on cancer patients
Abbreviations: NA - Not Applicable, MBSR - Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction, CBCT - Cognitively-Based Compassion Training, MBAT - Mindfulness-Based Art Therapy, CRC - Colorectal Cancer, MAPS -Mindful Awareness Practices, MBCT - Mindfulness-Based Cognitive Therapy, PES - Psychoeducation Support, MBCR - Mindfulness-Based Cancer Recovery, MBB - Mind-Body Bridging, MM - Mindfulness Meditation, MODEL - Mindfully Optimizing Delivery of End-of-Life, NK - Natural Killer (cells)
| Study reference no. | Cancer type | Mindfulness technique | Benefits (statistically significant) | Outcomes/comments |
| 3 | Breast cancer | urinary 6-sulphatoxymelatonin measured | Meditation beneficial | NA |
| 7 | Breast cancer | MBSR | Beneficial | Stress |
| 8 | Breast cancer | CBCT | Beneficial | Stress |
| 9 | Cancer | MBAT | Beneficial | Stress |
| 10 | Cancer | Meditation | Beneficial | Stress |
| 12 | Breast/CRC/melanoma | ConquerFear | Beneficial | Stress/anxiety |
| 13 | Breast cancer | MBSR | Beneficial | Proinflammatory cytokines |
| 14 | CRC | Mindfulness | Beneficial | Blunting of neuroendocrine profiles |
| 15 | Breast cancer | MBSR | Beneficial | Wellbeing |
| 17 | Prostate cancer | MBSR | Beneficial | Anxiety |
| 18 | Breast cancer | MBSR | Beneficial | Stress |
| 19 | Breast cancer | MBSR | Beneficial | Stress |
| 20 | Breast cancer | MAPS | Beneficial | Stress |
| 21 | Breast cancer | MBSR | Beneficial | Stress |
| 22 | Breast cancer | Contemplative self -healing | Beneficial | Stress |
| 25 | Breast cancer | MBCT | Beneficial | Pain |
| 28 | Breast cancer/CRC | MBSR/PES | Beneficial | Fatigue |
| 29 | Breast cancer/CRC | MBSR | Beneficial | Fatigue |
| 30 | Cancer survivors | MBSR | Beneficial | Fatigue |
| 33 | Cancer patients | Mindfulness | Beneficial | Cachexia |
| 35 | Breast cancer | MBSR | Beneficial | Sleep |
| 36 | Cancer | MBCR | Beneficial | Sleep |
| 37 | Cancer survivors | MBB/MM | Beneficial | Sleep |
| 38 | Cancer | MBSR | Beneficial | Sleep |
| 39 | Breast cancer | MBSR | Beneficial | Sleep |
| 41 | Breast cancer | MBSR | Beneficial | T cell function |
| 42 | Cancer | MBSR | Beneficial | NK cytolytic activity |
| 43 | Breast cancer | MBSR | Beneficial | NK cell activity |
| 44 | Cancer | MODEL intervention | Beneficial | Caregivers+patients |
| 45 | Lung cancer | MBSR | Not beneficial | Caregivers (although benefited patients) |
| 46 | Breast cancer | MBSR | Beneficial | Cost-effective |
| 47 | Breast cancer | MBAT | Not beneficial | Cost-effective |
| 48 | Breast cancer | MBCT | Beneficial | Cost-effective |
Common techniques used in MBSR
MBSR - Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction
| Technique | Description |
| Body scan | Patients focus awareness on individual parts of the body. |
| Sitting meditation | Participants instructed to sit down in a comfortable position and direct their full attention on sensation of breathing. |
| Mindful Hatha yoga | Yoga stretches and postures with the focus on body awareness rather than form. |
| Non-judging | A person intentionally pays full attention to whatever is occurring at the current moment without judging it. |
| Patience | Practice the knowledge that things unfold in their own time. |
| Beginner’s mind | Practice to see everything as if it were happening for the first time and being present in one’s experience. |
| Trust | One learns to honor one's own feelings rather than to suppress or distrust them. |
| Non-striving | Practicing to have no goal other than meditation itself. State of not doing anything, just accepting what comes. |
| Letting go | Practicing to neither try to hold on to or reject your experience. |
| Kindness | Understanding one’s difficulties and being kind and warm in the face of difficulties and avoiding being self-critical. |
| Curiosity | Focus of a person’s attention is opened to admit whatever enters experience, a stance of kindly curiosity allows the person to investigate whatever appears without automatic judgment. |
| Acceptance | Completely accepting the thoughts, feelings, sensations, and beliefs that one has, and understanding that they are simply those things only. |